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One Step Ahead of Disaster
Being ready for disaster goes beyond making sure your smoke detectors work and that you have stash of non-perishable food handy. Achieving true emergency preparedness takes a cooperative effort between families, first responders, elected officials, and federal, state, and local governments. Ready America is a public service organization designed to educate and empower Americans to prepare for and respond to emergencies including natural disasters and potential terrorist attacks. Together with the Department of Homeland Security, the Ad Council, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Ready America has developed a list of tools and resources to help your family be ready for emergencies. Taking these simple, but important, steps towards being fully prepared can make a big difference in the safety of your loved ones: Develop a family emergency plan. Your family may not be together when disaster strikes. Children could be at school, spouses at work or running errands, or teenagers out with their friends. It is important to plan how you will make contact with each other when disaster strikes. Because local phone systems experience high volumes of phone calls during a disaster, it may be a good idea to have an out-of-town relative or friend serve as the point of contact for your family. New technology also makes it easier to get in touch with family members quickly. Make sure each of your family members knows how to use services like text messaging. A simple message reading, “I’m ok” goes a long way in easing nerves until you are able to reach one another in person. Ready America, along with the Ad Council, has made it easy to create your family plan online. Click here to start a new family plan. It is also a good idea to inquire about the emergency plans at the places your family spends time like work, daycare, school, or church. Subscribe to alert services. Many communities have developed systems that will send text messages or emails alerting you to local emergencies or bad weather. Check your community information page to find ways that you can be alerted of emergency situations. Create an emergency supply kit. Homes with senior citizens should also include medications, medical records, and personal items such as eyeglasses, hearing aids, wheelchair batteries and other appropriate supplies. Stay informed. Where you live has an impact on the types of emergencies you are most susceptible to. It is important to learn the appropriate way to respond to potential emergencies that can happen in your state, region and community. It is also a good idea to know the emergency plans that have been established by your community. Visit Ready America’s Community and State Information page to find resources on appropriate emergency preparedness in your community. You can also take a quiz to test your readiness quotient to determine how you stack up against the national average and learn how you can make your family better prepared. While individual preparedness is critical, truly comprehensive emergency preparedness cannot stop with families. We need to ensure that our federal, state, and local governments are adequately prepared to respond when disaster strikes. I recently supported funding a state-wide exercise to improve disaster preparedness in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The funding included in H.R. 3326 will create complex and collaborative exercises across Virginia to help strengthen disaster preparedness. The exercises will include cooperation between state, federal and local officials to prepare for both man-made and natural disasters. Additionally, a portion of the collaborative exercises will include the use of modeling and simulation (M&S) technology. M&S is hands-on simulation-based training that provides federal, state, and local emergency responders the opportunity to practice and perfect their disaster response for natural and man-made disasters, including hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding, and even pandemic flu outbreak. As founder and chairman of the Congressional Modeling and Simulation Caucus, I have seen first-hand how these systems allow agencies to practice evacuating major cities before and after a disaster strikes. M&S technology is proving to be a valuable tool in emergency preparedness in terms of saved dollars, time, and lives by providing important hands-on training that has not been available to us before in emergency preparedness. This hurricane season and throughout the entire year, we hope and pray that our families and communities will not only be safe from the harsh forces of nature, but also from man-made destruction. Yet, we remember that the best and the easiest time to be prepared, both individually and collaboratively, is before disaster strikes rather than after – let’s be one step ahead of disaster. Congressman Forbes is hosting a free Seniors Protection Workshop to make sure you know how to protect your identity, how to properly save personal information, and how to find out what scams are targeting seniors. |
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